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tars to entertain at Trojan dance tonight
iW:
mm
With actresses Martha Raye and Brenda Joyce appearing in person, the fifth all-U dig of the summer term will be held from 7:30 to 9:30 tonight when Trojans dance to the music of Del Bond and his orchestra on the tennis court of the Alpha Delta Pi house, 814 West 28th street.
The ASSC dance is being sponsored by the SC Red Cross committee, and Peggy Gardiner is chairman of the affair. In addition to the appearances of Brenda Joyce and Martha Raye, who recently returned from an entertainment tour of
Leta Galentine requests the following people to meet in the ASSC office at 12:30 p.m. today: Helen Taylor Betty Markowitz, Betty Jany, Jean Working, Don Ferguson, Bob Stevens, Jack Armitage, Cal Straub, Dave Lavelle, Bill Gray, Margaret Ann Hausmann, and Bill Caldwell.
(WKvZ- vHBk v'S
MARTHA RAYE . to cut rug tonight.
North African army camps, Lt. Charles Bates, member of the gun crew of the destroyer Meredith, will give a short talk. The Meredith was torpedoed while attempting to land supplies on Guadalcanal.
•
Leta Galentine, ASSC vice-president, yesterday extended an invitation to all Trojan women to attend the dance and asked that they meet with her at 7 tonight at the ADPi house.
The dance is non-date, according to Miss Gardiner, though couples may attend. With an informal sports theme, it is being held for the entertainment of navy, marine, and army trainees.
Del Bond’s orchestra is from Pasadena and was procured through the Red Cross chapter in Santa Monica.
“Arrangements have been made for better lighting of the dance floor,” said Miss Gardiner, “and we can promise that dancers won’t stumble over each other.”
Dance committee members include Sally Unmack, decorations; Rosemarie Trucano, posters; Leota Robb and Peggy Serveis, contacts; Pat Parke, refreshments; and Betty May Rinehart, entertainment.
The sixth dance of the summer series will be a jinx dance to be given by the Pi Kappa Alpha fraternity Friday, Aug. 13. The PiKAs are planning a spook theme for the dig.
BRENDA JOYCE , adds charm to dig.
SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA
TROJAN
1. XXXV
Night phone: KI. 54*2
Los Angeles, Friday, Aug. 6, 1943
No. 15
dmiral Bagley to review V-12 unit
culty leaves r Hazen meet
e Hazen conference for the jsion ol student problems and ods of meeting them opened .night jeith a dinner at the ^Rafael Military academy.
lining the list of speakers be Dr. Walter Muelder, proof Christian jtheology aja,d
mm~ warn •
on the Trojan campus. Dr. d*r is to give a series of dis-
na on religion and the crisis beral arts, freedom and the vity of*^ values in education, jucation for social responsi-
other lecture series will be by Mrs. Grace Loucks Elliott, Tork authority on educational ion, and James Muilenberg. 3sor of literature and Semitic ages at the Pacific School of ion, Barkley, Cal. aether with Dr. Muelder, oth-resentatives of SC are Helen Moreland, dean of women; Ruth H. Grant, executive sec-of the YWCA; Miss Fran-‘cHale, secretary to the dean ?. David D. Eitzen, assistant ssor of pastoral service.
Trainees shine gear for first big inspection
In the first review of the SC V-12 naval college training unit as a whole, Rear Adm. D. W. Bagley, commandant of the 11th naval district, will make an informal inspection on University avenue tomorrow at approximately 11 a.m.
Admiral Bagley will stand in front of Administration building with President Rufus B. von
KleinSmid and officers and petty officers of the V-12 unit as 1130 trainees pass in review led by the NROTC drum and bugle corps.
Navy men will wear undress
ma Lhi
members will meet at 7 ht 323 Student Union.
to 35th street, the marine detachment of the naval college training unit will march behind the drum and bugle corps and will be followed by the NROTC unit and the remainder of the trainees. The Henderson hall band will march at the head of their unit.
“This is not a formal public affair,” said Capt. Reed M. Fawell, commander of the SC V-12 college training program, “although university personnel and persons interested may attend.”
It was not known last night whether or not Admiral Bagley will inspect the men’s quarters.
ojan wronged; w yell king ill a mystery
nother week has passed and 11 SC students do not know io will lead them in yells dur-g the coming football season. Last Wednesday’s Trojan cared a story that ASSC President 1 uaidweii would divulge tne
ame of thc new yell king at t Wednesday’s senate meeting, ut for the second time the Tro-n was wronged.
It seems that Dr. J. D. Cooke, ead of the scholarship commit-who must approve the newly opted resolution lowenng tne uirements for head yell king, is very hard man to locate these ay«. So until Dr. Cooke’s com-lttee can act on thc matter rojans must wait breathlessly or news of their cheer leader.
remaps SC students will be Informed of the identity of their new yell king before next Sept. . the day SC plays their coun-cousins, a school referred to *• UCLA. But that, of course, Pure speculation.
ADMIRAL BAGLEY
. . . piped aboard.
whites and marines will wear khaki. NROTC men will wear leggins, and neckerchiefs will be in order for the men in white.
Mustering along Hoover boulevard
Hancock trio opens (estival
Presentation of the Hancock trio will take place Aug. 16 at 8:30 p.m., thuj| commencing the SC festival of music public concerts. These performances will be presented in the Hancock auditorium.
The trio consists of Anton Maaskoff, violinist; John Crown, pianist; and Stephen De’ak, cellist, who has recently been added to the School of Music faculty.
Free admission tickets may be had at the School of Music.
Stamp sales schedule set
With “On to Victory!” their battle cry, the university War Board has announced the schedule for sororities sporsoring the weekly war stamp drives of the Victory Hut.
following tne termination or thi* schedule, other campus organizations will continue to plan the weekly rallies.
Women students are invited to assist in the work of the Victory Hut, and may make plans to do so by contacting any of the sororities given in the announced list.
Activity points will be received by girls working in the Hut, according to Carroll BrinkerhotT, War Board chairman lor the stamp drives.
By Wednesday of this week the Hut had reached the $600 mark. The booth is open from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. daily.
Patty Wiese, chairman of the war Board, presented tne roi-
lowing schedule for the Victory Hut, which is situated on the walk in front of the Administration building.
The Alpha Chi Omegas sponsored this week’s drive. Other sororities who will handle the task for the week beginning with the given dates are Alpha Delta Pi, Aug. 9; Alpha Epsilon Phi, Aug. 16; Alpha Gamma Delta, Aug. 23; Chi Omega, Aug. 30; Delta Delta Delta, Sept. 6; Delta Gamma, Sept. 13; Delta Zeta, Sept. 20; Gamma Phi Beta, Sept. 27; Kappa Aplha Theta, Oct. 4; Kappa Delta, Oct. 11; Phi Mu, Oct. 18; Pi Beta Phi, Oct 25, and Zeta Tau Alpha, Nov. 1.
Attention Mr* Tojo
Mystery shrouds new structure
Webster, the man who made the dictionary famous, says the meaning of “centrifugence” is tendency to fly from the center. At' that rate some (censored) pilot trainees are in for some rare experiences at SC.
When the time comes, which only the proper military authorities know, the excitement will be centered around a certain eightsided building now being erected "somewnere in tne sou Diock, West 36th place." The octagon affair is in the making behind the Science building.
Several Trojan reporters were sent to the scene of the odd-shaped building in an attempt to find just what was what. All that greeted the eye were huge piles of sand
by Maruin Levand
and gravel, an enormous flywheel, and a garage for an eight-sided automobile. (That should attract the attention of the Axis.)
Details were scarce. None of the bystanders could find out what was taking place., They came to the conclusion that the workers themselves have but a vague idea of what they are doing. if someone does know, lt must be a military secret.
Workers revealed something, however, which brings the word “centrifugence” back into the story. The flywheel will be placed in the building. It will revolve more than 60 m.p.h. The floor above it will revolve at a speed “somewhere around 750 m.p.h.
Future pilot trainees stationed
at SC probably will be tested in inis bunding under conditions
which prevail in a power-dive. At that rate ot speed, pilots will “blackout,” go into spins, and otner teats civilians shouldn't
know about.
It doesn’t matter how tall the building is going to be, so long as it is sturdy enough. It would be quite disastrous if the flywheel ever came loose. There is still the problem of lifting the flywheel.
Consult any dictionary for future details on “centrifugence,” and please don’t ask the editor how the floor is going to revolve at such an enormous rate of speed. They don’t know, since their complimentary subscription to a mechanical magazine has expired.
Golay will describe Beveridge plan today
•
Speaking as a former civil servant of the British government, John F. Golay, Trojan editor in 1938 and Rhodes scholarship winner, will discuss wartime administration in England and explain the Beveridge report today at 11 a.m., 302 Law building.
Golay left SC five years ago to study philosophy, politics, and economics at Oxford and when war broke out was appointed to the staff of the Ministry of Labor in England. Before joining the
—Courtesy L.A. Times
ALUMNUS GOLAY . . . blitz observer.
RAF Golay worked on the U.P. in London for a month and was personal secretary to Sir William Beveridge, author of the famous study on social planning in England.
With an Oxford accent, picked up in England, Golay will explain
the great administration problems faced by Sir Beveridge during the “battle of Britain” immediately after Dunkirk. Golay was Beveridge’s assistant at that time and both men lived in the basement of a demolished building for month*. In charge of manpower, it was up to Beveridge to keep the home industries on 24 hour production while England underwent huge air onslaughts by the lufftwaffe.
Golay will reserve the last portion of his talk for questions from the audience. » *
While at SC Golay ^as president of Sigma Delta Chi, honorary fraternity for men in - journalism, and in his junior year was elected to Phi Beta Kappa. He recently visited the Trojan City room and talked with members of the staff.
Of particular interest to Golay is how the United States is solving the manpower and labor shortage problem. At the present time he is an RAF pilot trainee in Mesa, Arix.
The discussion is open to tht
public.
Bretz wins office
Theta Xi elected Bill Bretz president at the last meeting of the fraternity. Other officers named were Gerald Guergens, vice-president; Frank Dale, secretary; Buzz Forward, house manager, and Ed Beard, pledge master.
A challenge
Trojan Editor:
Again Friday night rolls around and we find ourselves faced with another evening of battle. We must fight in the front-line trenches. Sometimes these trenches are in the backyard of the Theta Xi house and again they are in the Physical Education building. This week, for instance, the main scene of action, and reaction, will be the tennis courts
}f the ADPi house.
These Friday night digs have found a place in the trainees heart, mainly because they don’t make a hole in his fur-lined pocket.
However, last week I found myself in an embarrassing situation. More than once, suming up my courage (and taking a hitch in my belt) I slowly approached some feminine shape in tlie shadow and started to ask her for a dance. I’m happy that it was a slow approach for more than once I found her accompanied by a member of the opposite sex—opposite to her I mean.
When I saw the set-up (he was one of the top 10 men In the physical fitness tests) I quietly did an about face.
I now have the horrible impression that these digs are turning into date affairs—my drill sergeant has the same idea and he can’t be wrong.
There are a lot of us from other places than Los Angeles— Portland, Eugene, Moscow, Fresno, to name a few.
We’re pretty nice guys, on the whole, and we think that the SC women are pretty swell too. At least they look all right from where we stand—but that is so far away that we haven’t really had an opportunity to make an appraisal.
What we hope is that more SC women will see fit to spend their Friday nights on campus because we can’t go off campus. How about it?—A trainee.
(Editors’ note: Okay, women, here’s your chance to completely blast the charges made in this letter. By turning out in large numbers minus dates tonight you’ll be renewing many a serviceman’s faith in these Friday night digs. The last couple of affairs have proved disappointing in some respects. But tonight’s affair starring loud-mouthed Martha Raye should be the best yet. The stuff is there, let’# make it mellow.)

tars to entertain at Trojan dance tonight
iW:
mm
With actresses Martha Raye and Brenda Joyce appearing in person, the fifth all-U dig of the summer term will be held from 7:30 to 9:30 tonight when Trojans dance to the music of Del Bond and his orchestra on the tennis court of the Alpha Delta Pi house, 814 West 28th street.
The ASSC dance is being sponsored by the SC Red Cross committee, and Peggy Gardiner is chairman of the affair. In addition to the appearances of Brenda Joyce and Martha Raye, who recently returned from an entertainment tour of
Leta Galentine requests the following people to meet in the ASSC office at 12:30 p.m. today: Helen Taylor Betty Markowitz, Betty Jany, Jean Working, Don Ferguson, Bob Stevens, Jack Armitage, Cal Straub, Dave Lavelle, Bill Gray, Margaret Ann Hausmann, and Bill Caldwell.
(WKvZ- vHBk v'S
MARTHA RAYE . to cut rug tonight.
North African army camps, Lt. Charles Bates, member of the gun crew of the destroyer Meredith, will give a short talk. The Meredith was torpedoed while attempting to land supplies on Guadalcanal.
•
Leta Galentine, ASSC vice-president, yesterday extended an invitation to all Trojan women to attend the dance and asked that they meet with her at 7 tonight at the ADPi house.
The dance is non-date, according to Miss Gardiner, though couples may attend. With an informal sports theme, it is being held for the entertainment of navy, marine, and army trainees.
Del Bond’s orchestra is from Pasadena and was procured through the Red Cross chapter in Santa Monica.
“Arrangements have been made for better lighting of the dance floor,” said Miss Gardiner, “and we can promise that dancers won’t stumble over each other.”
Dance committee members include Sally Unmack, decorations; Rosemarie Trucano, posters; Leota Robb and Peggy Serveis, contacts; Pat Parke, refreshments; and Betty May Rinehart, entertainment.
The sixth dance of the summer series will be a jinx dance to be given by the Pi Kappa Alpha fraternity Friday, Aug. 13. The PiKAs are planning a spook theme for the dig.
BRENDA JOYCE , adds charm to dig.
SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA
TROJAN
1. XXXV
Night phone: KI. 54*2
Los Angeles, Friday, Aug. 6, 1943
No. 15
dmiral Bagley to review V-12 unit
culty leaves r Hazen meet
e Hazen conference for the jsion ol student problems and ods of meeting them opened .night jeith a dinner at the ^Rafael Military academy.
lining the list of speakers be Dr. Walter Muelder, proof Christian jtheology aja,d
mm~ warn •
on the Trojan campus. Dr. d*r is to give a series of dis-
na on religion and the crisis beral arts, freedom and the vity of*^ values in education, jucation for social responsi-
other lecture series will be by Mrs. Grace Loucks Elliott, Tork authority on educational ion, and James Muilenberg. 3sor of literature and Semitic ages at the Pacific School of ion, Barkley, Cal. aether with Dr. Muelder, oth-resentatives of SC are Helen Moreland, dean of women; Ruth H. Grant, executive sec-of the YWCA; Miss Fran-‘cHale, secretary to the dean ?. David D. Eitzen, assistant ssor of pastoral service.
Trainees shine gear for first big inspection
In the first review of the SC V-12 naval college training unit as a whole, Rear Adm. D. W. Bagley, commandant of the 11th naval district, will make an informal inspection on University avenue tomorrow at approximately 11 a.m.
Admiral Bagley will stand in front of Administration building with President Rufus B. von
KleinSmid and officers and petty officers of the V-12 unit as 1130 trainees pass in review led by the NROTC drum and bugle corps.
Navy men will wear undress
ma Lhi
members will meet at 7 ht 323 Student Union.
to 35th street, the marine detachment of the naval college training unit will march behind the drum and bugle corps and will be followed by the NROTC unit and the remainder of the trainees. The Henderson hall band will march at the head of their unit.
“This is not a formal public affair,” said Capt. Reed M. Fawell, commander of the SC V-12 college training program, “although university personnel and persons interested may attend.”
It was not known last night whether or not Admiral Bagley will inspect the men’s quarters.
ojan wronged; w yell king ill a mystery
nother week has passed and 11 SC students do not know io will lead them in yells dur-g the coming football season. Last Wednesday’s Trojan cared a story that ASSC President 1 uaidweii would divulge tne
ame of thc new yell king at t Wednesday’s senate meeting, ut for the second time the Tro-n was wronged.
It seems that Dr. J. D. Cooke, ead of the scholarship commit-who must approve the newly opted resolution lowenng tne uirements for head yell king, is very hard man to locate these ay«. So until Dr. Cooke’s com-lttee can act on thc matter rojans must wait breathlessly or news of their cheer leader.
remaps SC students will be Informed of the identity of their new yell king before next Sept. . the day SC plays their coun-cousins, a school referred to *• UCLA. But that, of course, Pure speculation.
ADMIRAL BAGLEY
. . . piped aboard.
whites and marines will wear khaki. NROTC men will wear leggins, and neckerchiefs will be in order for the men in white.
Mustering along Hoover boulevard
Hancock trio opens (estival
Presentation of the Hancock trio will take place Aug. 16 at 8:30 p.m., thuj| commencing the SC festival of music public concerts. These performances will be presented in the Hancock auditorium.
The trio consists of Anton Maaskoff, violinist; John Crown, pianist; and Stephen De’ak, cellist, who has recently been added to the School of Music faculty.
Free admission tickets may be had at the School of Music.
Stamp sales schedule set
With “On to Victory!” their battle cry, the university War Board has announced the schedule for sororities sporsoring the weekly war stamp drives of the Victory Hut.
following tne termination or thi* schedule, other campus organizations will continue to plan the weekly rallies.
Women students are invited to assist in the work of the Victory Hut, and may make plans to do so by contacting any of the sororities given in the announced list.
Activity points will be received by girls working in the Hut, according to Carroll BrinkerhotT, War Board chairman lor the stamp drives.
By Wednesday of this week the Hut had reached the $600 mark. The booth is open from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. daily.
Patty Wiese, chairman of the war Board, presented tne roi-
lowing schedule for the Victory Hut, which is situated on the walk in front of the Administration building.
The Alpha Chi Omegas sponsored this week’s drive. Other sororities who will handle the task for the week beginning with the given dates are Alpha Delta Pi, Aug. 9; Alpha Epsilon Phi, Aug. 16; Alpha Gamma Delta, Aug. 23; Chi Omega, Aug. 30; Delta Delta Delta, Sept. 6; Delta Gamma, Sept. 13; Delta Zeta, Sept. 20; Gamma Phi Beta, Sept. 27; Kappa Aplha Theta, Oct. 4; Kappa Delta, Oct. 11; Phi Mu, Oct. 18; Pi Beta Phi, Oct 25, and Zeta Tau Alpha, Nov. 1.
Attention Mr* Tojo
Mystery shrouds new structure
Webster, the man who made the dictionary famous, says the meaning of “centrifugence” is tendency to fly from the center. At' that rate some (censored) pilot trainees are in for some rare experiences at SC.
When the time comes, which only the proper military authorities know, the excitement will be centered around a certain eightsided building now being erected "somewnere in tne sou Diock, West 36th place." The octagon affair is in the making behind the Science building.
Several Trojan reporters were sent to the scene of the odd-shaped building in an attempt to find just what was what. All that greeted the eye were huge piles of sand
by Maruin Levand
and gravel, an enormous flywheel, and a garage for an eight-sided automobile. (That should attract the attention of the Axis.)
Details were scarce. None of the bystanders could find out what was taking place., They came to the conclusion that the workers themselves have but a vague idea of what they are doing. if someone does know, lt must be a military secret.
Workers revealed something, however, which brings the word “centrifugence” back into the story. The flywheel will be placed in the building. It will revolve more than 60 m.p.h. The floor above it will revolve at a speed “somewhere around 750 m.p.h.
Future pilot trainees stationed
at SC probably will be tested in inis bunding under conditions
which prevail in a power-dive. At that rate ot speed, pilots will “blackout,” go into spins, and otner teats civilians shouldn't
know about.
It doesn’t matter how tall the building is going to be, so long as it is sturdy enough. It would be quite disastrous if the flywheel ever came loose. There is still the problem of lifting the flywheel.
Consult any dictionary for future details on “centrifugence,” and please don’t ask the editor how the floor is going to revolve at such an enormous rate of speed. They don’t know, since their complimentary subscription to a mechanical magazine has expired.
Golay will describe Beveridge plan today
•
Speaking as a former civil servant of the British government, John F. Golay, Trojan editor in 1938 and Rhodes scholarship winner, will discuss wartime administration in England and explain the Beveridge report today at 11 a.m., 302 Law building.
Golay left SC five years ago to study philosophy, politics, and economics at Oxford and when war broke out was appointed to the staff of the Ministry of Labor in England. Before joining the
—Courtesy L.A. Times
ALUMNUS GOLAY . . . blitz observer.
RAF Golay worked on the U.P. in London for a month and was personal secretary to Sir William Beveridge, author of the famous study on social planning in England.
With an Oxford accent, picked up in England, Golay will explain
the great administration problems faced by Sir Beveridge during the “battle of Britain” immediately after Dunkirk. Golay was Beveridge’s assistant at that time and both men lived in the basement of a demolished building for month*. In charge of manpower, it was up to Beveridge to keep the home industries on 24 hour production while England underwent huge air onslaughts by the lufftwaffe.
Golay will reserve the last portion of his talk for questions from the audience. » *
While at SC Golay ^as president of Sigma Delta Chi, honorary fraternity for men in - journalism, and in his junior year was elected to Phi Beta Kappa. He recently visited the Trojan City room and talked with members of the staff.
Of particular interest to Golay is how the United States is solving the manpower and labor shortage problem. At the present time he is an RAF pilot trainee in Mesa, Arix.
The discussion is open to tht
public.
Bretz wins office
Theta Xi elected Bill Bretz president at the last meeting of the fraternity. Other officers named were Gerald Guergens, vice-president; Frank Dale, secretary; Buzz Forward, house manager, and Ed Beard, pledge master.
A challenge
Trojan Editor:
Again Friday night rolls around and we find ourselves faced with another evening of battle. We must fight in the front-line trenches. Sometimes these trenches are in the backyard of the Theta Xi house and again they are in the Physical Education building. This week, for instance, the main scene of action, and reaction, will be the tennis courts
}f the ADPi house.
These Friday night digs have found a place in the trainees heart, mainly because they don’t make a hole in his fur-lined pocket.
However, last week I found myself in an embarrassing situation. More than once, suming up my courage (and taking a hitch in my belt) I slowly approached some feminine shape in tlie shadow and started to ask her for a dance. I’m happy that it was a slow approach for more than once I found her accompanied by a member of the opposite sex—opposite to her I mean.
When I saw the set-up (he was one of the top 10 men In the physical fitness tests) I quietly did an about face.
I now have the horrible impression that these digs are turning into date affairs—my drill sergeant has the same idea and he can’t be wrong.
There are a lot of us from other places than Los Angeles— Portland, Eugene, Moscow, Fresno, to name a few.
We’re pretty nice guys, on the whole, and we think that the SC women are pretty swell too. At least they look all right from where we stand—but that is so far away that we haven’t really had an opportunity to make an appraisal.
What we hope is that more SC women will see fit to spend their Friday nights on campus because we can’t go off campus. How about it?—A trainee.
(Editors’ note: Okay, women, here’s your chance to completely blast the charges made in this letter. By turning out in large numbers minus dates tonight you’ll be renewing many a serviceman’s faith in these Friday night digs. The last couple of affairs have proved disappointing in some respects. But tonight’s affair starring loud-mouthed Martha Raye should be the best yet. The stuff is there, let’# make it mellow.)